On a morning for batsmen, Imam-ul-Haq went on to reach his third century of the series/Photo: Twitter
2/11
The carnage continued with Babar Azam then racing to a century of his own from 72 deliveries, his second fifty haven taken just 17 balls/Photo: Twitter
3/11
In response, Zimbabwe showed much more stackability with the bat than had been the case in the first four games of the series/Photo: Twitter
4/11
Hamilton Masakadza and Tinashe Kamunhukamwe got going with a 66-run opening stand, Zimbabwe's best of the series, and though Zimbabwe never looked like threatening Pakistan's total, the middle order did at least hold firm/Photo: Twitter
5/11
Prince Masvaure made 39 and Ryan Murray contributed 47 - personal bests for both players in their short careers - and Peter Moor finished off with 44 not out in a 67-run stand with Elton Chigumbura, allowing Zimbabwe to reach 233 for 4/Photo: Twitter
6/11
Pakistan completed a series whitewash over Zimbabwe with a 131-run win today in the fifth and final match at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo/Photo: Twitter
7/11
While he missed out on what would have been his third hundred of the series, Zaman did also claim the records for most runs in a five-match bilateral series with 515 and most runs scored between dismissals in ODIs, having scored 455 runs since he was last dismissed in the first match of the series/Photo: Twitter
8/11
On another record-setting day for the visitors, Fakhar Zaman became the fastest player in history to reach 1,000 career runs in one-day international cricket as Pakistan amassed 364 for 4/Photo: Twitter
9/11
Zaman broke the previous record of 21 innings by reaching the mark in his 17th innings in the course of a fluent half-century/Photo: Twitter
10/11
His opening partner Imam-ul-Haq was also in the runs once again, the pair adding their fourth century stand of the series/Photo: Twitter
11/11
They took the score to 168 in the 25th over before Zaman was caught behind for 85/Photo: Twitter